08/12-18 | Weekly Bird Flu Thread: Bird Flu virus back with a bang in Cambodia

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Bird Flu virus back with a bang in Cambodia.
Posted on : 2006-08-12 | Author : Darya Zarin
News Category : Health

The bird flu virus is back in Cambodia, affecting the poultry in the southeast region of the country, after a four month-interval,
as reported by Cambodia's Agriculture Ministry.

The virus was detected yesterday, wherein two ducks tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain, in Prey Veng province located 90km east of the Cambodian capital.

"We tested six ducks and two of them were positive," said Kao Phal, director of the ministry's animal health department.

As per the information given by the U.N. bulletin, about 150 calls were received from all over the country earlier this month on the Cambodian bird flu telephone "hot line” asking for varied information about bird flu.

A high alert situation has been declared all over the country after fresh cases were discovered last month in the neighboring countries including Laos and Thailand.


Also it was stated that about 400 ducks would be killed as a precautionary measure for curbing the spread of the deadly virus.

According to the UN children's agency and government officials, help of Buddhist monks and teachers has been sought to fight against the bird flu outbreak in the country outbreak of bird flu, said.

A series of workshops will be conducted this month for monks and pagoda members as well as school teachers all around the country to disseminate information about bird flu prevention as stated by the UNICEF.

The deadly H5N1 virus causing bird flu, that showed its first signs in 2003 in Asia had been spreading rapidly all over the world and has killed 138 people worldwide, of which six belong to Cambodia.

Infact, experts fear the possibility of the H5N1 virus to could lead to a human pandemic, if its mutuates in the form capable of causing human-to-human infection.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/8108.html#
 

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PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Indonesia Reports Human Bird Flu Infection
By VOA News
12 August 2006

Indonesian officials say a teenager from West Java has tested positive for the H5N1 strain of bird flu.


The Health Ministry said Saturday the 17-year-old is being treated at a local hospital.

Elsewhere, Cambodia's Health Ministry announced a new outbreak of the H5N1 strain among poultry in the country's southeast.

The ministry said the outbreak was discovered in ducks in a village farm in Prey Veng province. More than 1,000 ducks have already died, and authorities are culling the remaining poultry to contain the spread of the virus.


Bird flu has killed nearly 140 people since 2003, mainly in East Asian countries.

Health officials are concerned that the virus could mutate into a form easily transmissible by human-to-human contact.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-08-12-voa11.cfm

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia

Experts say bird flu effort still far from success

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20060812.H08&irec=7

Tb. Arie Rukmantara, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Animal health experts are casting doubt on the government's claim that it has done its utmost to curb the spread of the H5N1 avian flu virus among poultry, saying that the number of fowl culled and inoculated lags far behind the number infected.

"The millions of chickens being killed is a lot, but proportionally, it's not so much as to cut the chain of virus transmission," Indonesian Veterinary Association chairman Budi Tri Akoso said Friday.

The government claimed Wednesday it had culled almost 29 million fowls and vaccinated more than 260 million chickens over the last two years, in response to international criticism that it had been unwilling to carry out mass culling .

Budi said since bird flu is found in almost all of Indonesia's provinces, infecting many of the country's estimated one billion chickens, that number is small.

"That's why we keep seeing new cases of bird flu emerge," he said.

He added that the government could not claim success on its poultry vaccination drive because field workers use eight different kinds of vaccine.

"The government should choose just one type," he suggested. "The more vaccines we use the more likely they are to endanger other creatures."

Animal experts believe that the use of a variety of vaccines to curb the spread of H5N1 among animals might cause certain strains of the virus to become more robust and resistant to vaccines.

He also lamented the absence of standard procedures in poultry slaughtering, saying that each region used different methods to cull chickens.

"I know of one region that killed chickens by dumping them in a big hole and burning them without killing them first," he said, adding that such methods violated international guidelines for the humane killing of animals for disease control purposes.

Agriculture Ministry officials have established protocols that address the timing and range of fowl slaughtering, vaccination and disinfection spraying, but do not specify methods of killing.

I Putu Widhiantara, a communication officer for the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), which is partnering with the Agriculture Ministry in addressing bird flu outbreaks, believes there is still much to be done to cut the chain of H5N1 transmission among poultry.

"The government has killed many chickens, but that doesn't mean it's enough, because according to data from the National Commission on Bird Flu, Indonesia has 435 million chickens living in backyard farms," he said. He added that most of the H5N1-infected fowl were found in backyard farms.

FAO is helping the government achieve three essential goals in its campaign against bird flu: detecting possible H5N1 outbreaks, containing the virus from spreading to wider areas, and preventing the reemergence of the virus in areas where poultry have been culled
 

JPD

Inactive
Cambodia reports bird flu outbreak

http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/conditions/08/12/birdflu.cambodia.ap/

Saturday, August 12, 2006; Posted: 3:46 a.m. EDT (07:46 GMT)

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) -- Cambodia's Agriculture Ministry has confirmed a new outbreak of bird flu in poultry in the country's southeast, a ministry official said Saturday.

Kao Phal, director of the ministry's animal health department, said the outbreak was the virulent H5N1 type of the virus.

It was detected Friday in Prey Veng province, which borders Vietnam, he said.

The H5N1 virus, which re-emerged in Asia in late 2003, has killed at least 138 people worldwide, including six in Cambodia.

The announcement came after the government ordered health officials to be on alert for possible human cases of bird flu.

The alert followed recent outbreaks of the virus in poultry in neighboring countries and two recent human deaths from the disease in Thailand, a bird flu bulletin compiled by United Nations agencies said.

It said the Cambodian Ministry of Health has "called all provincial rapid response teams to put them on alert and ask them to follow up with hospitals and health centers" on suspected human cases of bird flu.

On Friday, Vietnam reported its first cases of bird flu in poultry since December, sparking fears of a resurgence of the virus in the country, which had been hailed for controlling its spread.

The U.N. bulletin said that since early this month, a Cambodian bird flu telephone "hot line" had received more than 150 calls from people in the countryside informing officials about dead poultry or asking for information about symptoms of the disease.

It also said a daily one-hour radio call-in program about bird flu was launched early this month on a local station.

The bulletin is published jointly by the World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization and UNICEF.

The government has also enlisted Buddhist monks to help spread information on the virus. Workshops will be held this month for monks and other citizens at 2,538 pagodas in 11 provinces, the U.N. said Wednesday.
 

JPD

Inactive
Thailand

Volunteers to be deployed in Bangkok to monitor bird flu

http://english.people.com.cn/200608/12/eng20060812_292442.html

Thailand's caretaker Public Health Minister Sudarat Keyuraphan on Friday said the government would mobilize some 7,500 volunteers this month to search for sick chickens and humans across Bangkok in an effort to prevent the spread of bird flu.

Sudarat said livestock officials have been recruiting volunteers from Bangkok farmers and will train them to look for bird flu in assigned communities, Thai News Agency reported.

She said the authorities expected to train some 7,500 volunteers within this month and would deploy one of them in every area at risk in Bangkok to carry out a close monitoring for bird flu.

The minister, after visiting some poultry farms in Bangkok, expressed her concern regarding the conventional way of raising chickens that could pose a threat to human health.

"I am worried as chickens live in close contact with farmers and villagers who keep hens, fighting cocks or pet chickens," she said.

Sudarat said the government planned to close cockfighting rings in the Thai capital, but would allow services that carry out blood tests for bird flu virus in poultry every month to continue.
 

JPD

Inactive
Iran

Bird Flu Warning

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8505210474

TEHRAN (Fars News Agency)- An Iranian academic center raised the warning status for regional bird flu contamination in northern Iran.


In a statement released on Saturday, Gilan Medical Sciences University demanded the public to observe the rules of hygiene and to take the necessary precautions.

The university has also called on people to refrain from selling and buying of living birds.

It has also demanded the public to avoid direct contact with domestic and wild birds and to inform health authorities of the nearest health center or animal clinics if ever they come across any suspicious case.
 

JPD

Inactive
Vietnam Finds Bird Flu Virus In Poultry 1st Time This Yr

http://framehosting.dowjonesnews.com/sample/samplestory.asp?StoryID=2006081104200002&Take=2

HANOI (AP)--Vietnam on Friday reported its first cases of bird flu this year in poultry, igniting fears of a possible resurgence of the H5N1 virus in the country that had been hailed for controlling its spread.

The virus was detected in two ducks and two geese in random testing in southern Ben Tre province, said Mai Van Hiep, director of the Ben Tre Animal Health Bureau.

Officials killed 30 geese on Monday in the affected area, but the ducks had already been sold last month, he said. The samples were taken in late June, but the results were not returned until last week.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Third H5N1 Confirmed Case in Western Java This Week

Recombinomics Commentary
August 12, 2006

An Indonesian teenager has tested positive for bird flu according to local tests and is being treated in hospital, a senior health ministry official said on Saturday.

It was not clear if the 17-year-old youth from West Java had contact with sick fowl

The teenager's swab samples will only be sent to a World Health Organisation-accredited laboratory if the health ministry thinks the specimens need further testing.

According to the WHO, if two independent local laboratories return positive results from human samples, then the case is considered definitive.


The above comments describe the third confirmed H5N1 bird flu case in Indonesia this week. The first case was from Bekasi and died on August 7. The second case was from Tangerang and died August 8. The above case is from the West Java regency of Garut.

H5N1 cases from these areas have been common in 2006 and all cases have a novel sequences not found in H5n1 from poultry from Indonesia.
Additional recent samples have been sent to Australia for testing, but matches with these samples are also unlikely.

The cases in the western portion of Java continue to mount, and H5N1 from these patients continue to evolve away from the H5N1 sequences in Indonesia.

More aggressive sequencing is required to determine the course of the human infections and to monitor the genetic changes, which will be necessary from effective vaccine targeting.

New H5N1 cases are also being reported in Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia. The H5N1 in Indonesia have sequences in common with Clade 1 isolates from southeast Asia. However, recent sequences from Hong Kong as well as earlier sequences from Laos and Malaysia indicate the Clade 2 Fujian strain of H5N1 has moved into Southeast Asia. This strain has been found in all reported human H5N1 cases from China in 2005 and 2006.


http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08120602/H5N1_Java_3.html

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
46 possible Thai bird flu patients being monitored

BANGKOK, Aug 13 (TNA) - A total of 46 Thai patients suspected of contracting the deadly avian influenza are under close medical supervision, while Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has approved a budget to build 100 more patient rooms at hospitals nationwide, said Public Health Minister Pinij Jarusombat on Sunday.

Mr. Pinij visited two patients having bird flu-like symptoms at a government-run hospital Sunday afternoon.

The first patient is a 24-year-old man from Bangkok's neighbouring province of Samut Prakan, while the second is a 66-year-old woman from the northeastern province of Nakhon Ratchasima.

Both are in a critical condition, said Mr. Pinij, adding that results would be known Monday (August 14) whether they have come down with bird flu or human influenza.

Expressing concerns over the renewed outbreak of the deadly disease, Mr. Pinij said a total of 46 patients in 16 provinces nationwide are now being under the close supervision of doctors.

The northern province of Phichit has most patients with nine, followed by eight in nearby Nakhon Sawan Province and five in Bangkok's neighbouring Nonthaburi Province, he said.

Mr. Pinij said the prime minister had given the green light for a budget to build 100 more rooms for patients suspected of contracting the disease.

Most of the rooms will be built at hospitals in provinces where the situation is severe such as Phichit, Uthai Thani, Kampaengphet and Nakhon Sawan and they will be completed within three months.

Mr. Pinij said he expected the budget would likely be given by the Bureau of the Budget on Tuesday or Wednesday (August 15-16). (TNA)--E111

http://etna.mcot.net/query.php?nid=24061

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Netherlands

H5N1 suspected in Rotterdam zoo
Sat Aug 12, 2006 11:55 PM BST

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Two young owls which died in a zoo in Rotterdam are suspected of having the H5N1 bird flu virus, the Dutch farm ministry said late on Saturday.

The Netherlands, Europe's second biggest poultry producer after France, has never reported a case of the highly pathogenic avian flu strain which is endemic in parts of Asia and has spread to birds in a number of European Union countries.

A ministry spokeswoman said further tests were being conducted, but it was suspected that the birds died of a highly pathogenic strain of the virus. Final test results are due in the coming days.

The H5N1 virus has spread rapidly from late 2003 from Asia to Europe, the Middle East and Africa. The virus can occasionally infect people and has killed 138 people over the past three years, according to figures from the World Health Organisation.

No other dead birds have been found, and authorities are currently testing other birds in the zoological garden, most of which were vaccinated, the spokeswoman said.

The Netherlands found a low-pathogenic H7 bird flu strain at a farm earlier this month, prompting five countries to ban imports of Dutch poultry.

The Dutch suffered a devastating outbreak of an H7N7 avian flu strain in 2003 that led to the culling of about a third of the poultry flock, some 30 million birds.

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/art...280312_RTRUKOC_0_UK-BIRDFLU-DUTCH.xml&src=rss

:vik:
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
12 Aug 2006 09:30 GMT

DJ UPDATE:Cambodia Ag Official: New Bird Flu Outbreak Is H5N1

Copyright © 2006, Dow Jones Newswires

(Adds comments from Cambodian animal health official on where virus was detected, comments from health official, details)

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)--Cambodia's Agriculture Ministry has confirmed a new outbreak of bird flu in poultry in the country's southeast, a ministry official said Saturday.

Kao Phal, director of the ministry's animal health department, said the outbreak was the virulent H5N1 type of the virus.

It was detected Friday in Prey Veng province, which borders Vietnam, he said. The province is about 50 kilometers southeast of the capital Phnom Penh.

He said the virus came from samples taken from ducks at a small village farm.

Some of the farm's 1,600 ducks began falling sick on Aug. 2 but it took until Aug. 6 before the information reached local animal health officials because of the remoteness of the village, Kao Phal said.

More than 1,000 ducks have already died, and animal health officials on Saturday were culling the remaining ducks and spraying disinfectant to prevent the virus from spreading, he said by phone from the stricken village.

Ly Sovann, director of the Health Ministry's disease surveillance bureau, said there were no reports of new human infections from the virus but added that field officials will conduct an investigation.

The H5N1 virus, which re-emerged in Asia in late 2003, has killed at least 138 people worldwide, including six in Cambodia.

The announcement came after the government ordered health officials to be on alert for possible human cases of bird flu.

The alert followed recent outbreaks of the virus in poultry in neighboring countries and two recent human deaths from the disease in Thailand, a bird flu bulletin compiled by United Nations agencies said.

It said the Cambodian Ministry of Health has "called all provincial rapid response teams to put them on alert and ask them to follow up with hospitals and health centers" on suspected human cases of bird flu.

On Friday, Vietnam reported its first cases of bird flu in poultry since December, sparking fears of a resurgence of the virus in the country, which had been hailed for controlling its spread.

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 12, 2006 05:30 ET (09:30 GMT)

http://framehosting.dowjonesnews.com/sample/samplestory.asp?StoryID=2006081209300000&Take=1

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesian teenager tests positive for bird flu

http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=18215

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - An Indonesian teenager has tested positive for bird flu according to local tests and is being treated in hospital, a senior health ministry official said on Saturday.

It was not clear if the 17-year-old youth from West Java had contact with sick fowl, the usual mode of transmission of the H5N1 bird flu virus that is endemic in poultry in nearly all of Indonesia's provinces, Reuters reported.

The teenager had a fever and breathlessness, some of the symptoms of avian influenza that has killed 44 people in Indonesia since last year. Most of the human cases have occurred this year and Indonesia now has the world's highest death toll.

"We have one more positive case of avian influenza. This is the result from a health ministry laboratory and NAMRU," said another official, Nyoman Kandun, the health ministry's director-general of disease control, referring to the U.S.

Naval Medical Research Unit based in Jakarta.

The teenager's swab samples will only be sent to a World Health Organisation-accredited laboratory if the health ministry thinks the specimens need further testing.

According to the WHO, if two independent local laboratories return positive results from human samples, then the case is considered definitive.

In Vietnam, where 42 people have died, there have been no reported infections in people this year after the government imposed sweeping vaccination programmes for birds.

Indonesia has been criticised for not doing enough to stamp out H5N1, which still remains essentially an animal disease but experts fear could spark a pandemic if it mutates into a form that can pass easily among people.

Unlike Vietnam, which has conducted mass culls to get rid of sources of infection, Indonesia has only carried out selective culling and only in places where there are known outbreaks of H5N1. (*)
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu confirmed in the Netherlands

http://www.speroforum.com/site/arti...=4929&t=Bird+Flu+confirmed+in+the+Netherlands

The bird flu was first discovered after a routine test by the Wild Life Health Centre and found traces of H5N1



Sunday, August 13, 2006
by Spero News See all articles by this author

The Dutch government has confirmed its first H5N1 bird flu case in the country. The case was found in 2 dead young owls in a zoo in Rotterdam.

The bird flu was first discovered after a routine test by the Wild Life Health Centre and found traces of H5N1. Also a lab in Lelystad, the CIDC, has confirmed this. Further tests will be carried out due to be realeased in a few days.

Netherlands has never had a reported case of H5N1 before.

The zoo will remain open because bird flu can only spread by close contact but restrictions will be in place to protect visitors, staff and other animals.

The source of the bird flu is unknown. Staff have been given prophylactic medication.
 

JPD

Inactive
Cambodian village placed under watch for 30 days after bird flu outbreak(updated 03:44 p.m.)

http://www.chinapost.com.tw/i_latestdetail.asp?id=40324

2006/8/13
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)


A Cambodian village hit by a new outbreak of the virulent H5N1 bird flu virus will be closely monitored for 30 days, as officials also inspect surrounding areas in an effort to prevent the disease from spreading, an official said Sunday.

Following recommended procedures, animal health officials will continue collecting samples from poultry in the village and in a three-kilometer (1.8-mile) radius around it to test for bird flu, said Kao Phal, director of the Agriculture Ministry's animal health department.

"The village itself has been placed under constant monitoring for a 30-day period to prevent the spread of the virus," Kao Phal said.

He also said that officials have finished culling some 400 ducks that were part of the 1,600 on the small village farm where the outbreak began.

The ministry on Saturday confirmed the outbreak of H5N1 virus among ducks in Rokar Chuor Timuoy village in Prey Veng province, about 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of the capital Phnom Penh, and bordering Vietnam.

Some of the affected ducks began falling sick on Aug. 2, and more than 1,000 of them died in following days.

This latest outbreak has prompted Agriculture Minister Chan Sarun to urge people across the country to be on "high alert" for bird flu.

In a statement broadcast on the state-run television network TVK Saturday, he ordered a strict enforcement of a ban on the import of poultry products from neighboring countries, as well as transport and trade of poultry in or near the stricken village.

Ly Sovann, director of the Health Ministry's disease surveillance bureau, said Sunday that there are no signs yet of any villagers being infected by the virus.

The H5N1 virus, which re-emerged in Asia in late 2003, has killed at least 138 people worldwide, including six in Cambodia.

The latest death in Cambodia occurred in April. A 12-year-old boy, also from Prey Veng province, died from the H5N1 virus after coming into contact with sick fowl.

But the deceased boy's village is in a district far to the north of the village where the latest outbreak occurred.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesian bird flu patient refuses treatment, officials say

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaillgen.asp?fileid=20060814154128&irec=0

JAKARTA (AP): Indonesia's latest bird flu patient checked out of hospital after spending just a night there, while his cousin died last week showing symptoms of the virus but was not tested in time, health officials said Monday.

Umar Aup was admitted to a hospital in West Java province last Wednesday and left the next day on the orders of his family, who said they could treat him at home with a mixture of prayers and traditional remedies, said Dr. Eka Sony, a Health Ministry official investigating the case.

The 17-year-old remains very ill, said Sony, who visited him Sunday in his remote village.

"Our team felt very frustrated we were not able to persuade the family to let doctors take care of Umar," said Sony. "His father said he has the right to choose the treatment for his son, whatever the risk."

Villagers said Aup and his cousin collected the carcasses of around 100 chickens that died suddenly last week and fed them to dogs, said Sony.

Sony said Aup's cousin died after showing symptoms of the virus.

Health officials have said they suspect that many Indonesians have died from bird flu unreported because they no tests were performed.

Laboratory tests have confirmed Aup has the virus.

Just under 60 percent of those who contract the virus die from it, according to a breakdown of cases reported to the World Health Organization.

The case shows the challenges facing health workers dealing with bird flu in Indonesia, a sprawling country which last week became the country worst hit by the virus. It has recorded 44 deaths.

The H5N1 virus has killed at least 138 people worldwide since it began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003, according to a tally kept by the WHO.

Most human cases have been traced to contact with infected birds, but experts fear the virus -- which remains hard for people to catch -- will mutate into a form that spreads easily among people, potentially sparking a pandemic.

The virus is rampant among Indonesia's billions of backyard chickens.

Slaughtering often isn't carried out following outbreaks, vaccination is spotty and surveillance is weak, international experts say. (***)
 

BerkshireGrl

Inactive
Just watching press conference with Tony Snow on CNN. He said something about H5N1 being found in Michigan and they will talk about it soon. Anybody else heard anything? They said they think it is low pathogen H5, but found in some kind of bird. Will let everyone know when I hear anything else.


BerkshireGrl
 

JPD

Inactive
China confirms new human case of bird flu

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-08/14/content_4961103.htm

BEIJING, Aug. 14 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese Ministry of Health on Monday confirmed a man had died from the H5N1 bird flu virus in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The victim, a 62-year-old farmer, became ill on June 19, and died on July 12.

Epidemiological research showed the man did not have close contact with any human cases of bird flu and sick or dead poultry in the last month of his life.

The regional center for disease control (CDC) and prevention tested his samples and got negative results 14 days after he fell ill, but the re-test by the national CDC on July 16 indicated he was H5N1 positive.

On August 2, the national CDC tested the rest of his samples left from previous tests and again got positive results, said the ministry.

The ministry confirmed it as a human case of bird flu by both Chinese and WHO standards and reported the new case to the World Health Organization.

Local health authorities have tightened prevention and control measures and have found no abnormal symptoms of the people who had close contact with the farmer.

This case brings China's total human cases of bird flu to 21 and the death toll from the disease to 14.

An outbreak of bird flu in poultry in Xinjiang's Aksu City was confirmed on July 14.

A total of 3,045 chickens were killed by the disease and another 356,976 were culled when the outbreak was confirmed, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

It announced on August 10 that the outbreak had been brought under control.

The information office of the Ministry of Health said they could not link the new human case with outbreaks among poultry in the region.

The source of infection for the new case is still unclear, spokesman of the Ministry of Health Mao Qun'an told Xinhua. The direct causes of most of the previous cases in China are also unknown.

Last week, the Ministry of Health confirmed the mainland's first human casualty of bird flu actually occurred in November 2003, two years before the previous official figures.

The case, in which a 24-year-old man died in Beijing, was first revealed by eight Chinese scientists in June who published a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine. The ministry then carried out parallel tests with the WHO to confirm their claims.

The WHO has said it was the first ever human infection from theH5N1 outbreak.

By August 9, the WHO had recorded 236 human cases of bird flu, including 138 fatalities. Enditem
 

JPD

Inactive
Michigan

USDA says bird flu case no risk to humans

http://today.reuters.com/news/artic...U-USA.xml&WTmodLoc=Home-C2-TopNews-newsOne-12

By Christopher Doering

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The bird flu virus has been found in a pair of wild swans in Michigan, but U.S. officials said on Monday the birds have not contracted the deadly H5N1 strain that has spread through birds in Asia, Europe and Africa, killing more than 135 people.

Routine tests conducted in a Michigan gaming area found two of 20 swans have what government officials believe is likely a low-pathogenic strain of H5N1. Confirmatory test results are underway and will be available in about two weeks, but officials stressed there is no threat to human health.

"We can definitely say this is not the H5N1 highly pathogenic virus that's been found in Asia and other parts of the world," said the U.S. Agriculture Department's Ron DeHaven, head of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. "It's not the introduction of that virus into North America."


The swans had shown no sign of sickness and test results indicate this is low pathogenicity avian influenza.

Pathogenicity refers to the ability of the virus to produce a disease. A low-pathogenic strain produces less disease and mortality in birds than does a high-pathogenic version.

Health officials and industry analysts said they do not believe the infected swans came in contact with U.S. commercial poultry.

Shares of Tyson Foods Inc. and Pilgrim's Pride Corp. shrugged off the news as the country's No. 1 and No.2 largest U.S. chicken companies, respectively, were both up at the New York Stock Exchange.

"This is a nonissue because it is not the bad flu and because it is not in chickens," said Paul Aho, an economist with Poultry Perspective, a consulting firm for the poultry industry.

The National Chicken Council said this showed the monitoring and surveillance program is working and could detect the Asian bird flu strain if it reached the United States.

The low-pathogenic strain of H5N1 has been found before in wild birds in the United States -- in 1975 and 1986. A similar low-pathogenic strain was found in Canada last year. It is common for mild and low pathogenic strains of bird flu to appear in the United States and other countries.

The infected swans were found as part of an increased surveillance program put in place after Congress approved a $29 million request by the Bush administration in December. So far, more than 10,000 wild birds have been tested.

Just last week, the program was expanded beyond Alaska -- targeted because of its close proximity to the Pacific Flyway with Asia -- to the rest of the country.


"We see no cause for public health and medical authorities to take any special actions as a result of this information," said Bill Raub, science advisor to the Department of Health and Human Services.

The latest H5N1 bird flu strain in Asia, Europe and Africa is known to have killed 138 people and forced hundreds of millions of birds worldwide to be destroyed. It has yet to be found in the United States.

Some experts believe the H5N1 virus could mutate and spread easily from person to person, potentially killing millions.

(Additional reporting by Bob Burgdorfer in Chicago.)
 

JPD

Inactive
Avian influenza – situation in China – update 14

http://www.who.int/csr/don/2006_08_14/en/index.html

14 August 2006

The Ministry of Health in China has confirmed the country’s 21st case of human infection with the H5N1 avian influenza virus.

The case occurred in a 62-year-old male farmer from the north-western province of Xinjiang. He developed symptoms on 19 June and died on 12 July. Initial tests on patient specimens produced negative results. As a precautionary measure, tests were repeated during July and August and eventually produced positive results, which were confirmed today by the Ministry of Health.

An epidemiological investigation of the case was unable to uncover a history of exposure to dead or diseased birds. The man had no history of travel during the month prior to symptom onset. No recent poultry outbreaks have been reported in the vicinity of the man’s home. Xinjiang Province had not previously reported a human case.

Of the 21 cases confirmed to date in China, 14 have been fatal.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Familial Cluster in Western Java Indonessia

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08140601/H5N1_Java_Cluster.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 14, 2006

Villagers said Aup and his cousin collected the carcasses of around 100 chickens that died suddenly last week and fed them to dogs, said Sony.

Sony said Aup's cousin died after showing symptoms of the virus.

Health officials have said they suspect that many Indonesians have died from bird flu unreported because they no tests were performed.

Laboratory tests have confirmed Aup has the virus.


The above comments describe a new H5N1 bird flu family cluster in West Java. The teenager, who is the third confimed case in western Java this week, had left the hospital is being treated at home with herbal medicines, and his cousin has already died with bird flu symptoms. Disease onset dates have not been given for the cousin, but it is likely that he infected his cousin. Although there is dead poultry in the area, there still has been no match between H5N1 from human and bird cases on Java in Indonesia this year.

The lack of testing of the index case is not uncommon, which limits the number of clusters reported. However, the latest familial cluster in Indonesia is cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Bird Flu Fatality in Xinjiang China

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08140602/H5N1_Xinjiang_Fatality.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 14, 2006

China has confirmed a new human case of bird flu, a 62-year-old farmer who died last month, state media said.

The victim from the northwestern region of Xinjiang fell ill on June 19 and died on July 12, Xinhua news agency said, citing the health ministry.


The above comments raise concerns about the spread of H5N1 bird flu into western China and Russia. There is also concern regarding reporting delays. Today's report is almost two months after the patients showed symptoms.

The date and location of this case is important. Prior reports from China have been from the east. This is the first human case in Xinjiang province. The province has had many outbreaks in the past that coincided with migration to and from Qinghai Lake in China and Chany Lake in Novosibirsk, include June of this year..

In the past, the H5N1 from these regions was the Qinghai strain of H5N1. However, human cases in China involve the Fujian strain, which is related to Qinghai, but distinct. Recent sequence data from Hong Kong show widespread detection in many wild birds in Hong Kong. The sequence was also detected in Laos and Malaysia.

Now polymorphisms are appearing of Qinghai isolates in Russia, indicating more recombination and acquisition of the polymorphisms.

New sequences create new problems, an the recombination in H5N1 has been significant, WHO press releases not withstanding.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Bird Flu in Michigan

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08140603/H5N1_Michigan.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 14, 2006

White House press secretary Tony Snow has announce a press conference of H5N1 in mute swans in Michigan. His comments indicated it was low pathogenic avian influenza and is likely to have strong relationship to the H5N1 detected in Manitoba last August. The H5N1 was part of an expanded surveillance program across southern Canada. H5 was detected across Canada and was found in 24% of young mallards tested in British Columbia.

To date, only one sequence, A/mallard/BC317/2005(H5N2), has been published, which was from an H5N1 in British Columbia. Although the isolate was low path, it had polymorphsims found in H1N1 Canadian swine. Today, a Qinghai H5N1 sequence from a cat in the Ukraine, A/cat/Dagestan/87/06(H5N1) also shares a polymorphism with the Canadian isolate from 2005.

Recently H5 was also detected in a dead goose on Prince Edward Island. The H5 was not isolated, but dead waterfowl are a characteristic of Qinghai H5N1.

Thus, today's announcement may seem reassuring, because the H5 was detected. However, the H5N1 has been widespread for over a year, and the low pathogenic H5 can easily recombine with high pathogenic H5N1. which is dramatically extending its geographical reach.
 

JPD

Inactive
Sequence Analysis of H5N1 Bird Flu in Michigan

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08140604/H5N1_Michigan_Sequence.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 14, 2006

The additional testing that we're doing would include sequencing the genetic material. What is the sequence of the genes, and is that consistent with a North American strain or an Asian strain? The fact that this was compatible with our North American virus and not compatible with the Asian high path avian influenza virus that we are able to say that this is not the incursion of that Asian high path H5N1 virus.

There's also another test to determine pathogenicity or really two ways to determine pathogenicity. One is, looking at that sequence, that gene sequence. It's through that gene sequence testing that we're able to say that from a genetic standpoint this looks like a low pathogenic virus.

The above comments indicate that the H5N1 detected in two of twenty mute swans on Lake Erie in southern Michigan were LPAI (low pathogenic avian influenza. It is likely that the full sequence will be similar top the recently releases HA sequence of H5N1 detected on British Columbia,A/mallard/BC317/2005(H5N2), almost exactly one year ago. However, the exact sequence can provide valuable clues about the presence of avian HPAI version of H5N1. In wild birds, that version is most commonly the Qinghai strain.

The Qinghai strain was first identified in May of 2005 at Qinghai Lake. It migrated into southern Siberia for the summer and caused outbreaks in Russia, Kazakhstan, and Siberia. The strain then migrated to Europe, the Middle East, and Africa, as well as China. Sequences of the H5N1 from mute swans in Astrakhan have North American sequences suggesting H5N1 may have already migrated to Canada last year. However, HPAI H5N1 has not been reported in Canada.

Last year young ducks were tested as part of an expanded banding program across southern Canada. Four H5 sero-types (H5N1, H5N2, H5N3, H5N9) were identified. H5N1 was in Manitoba, while H5N2 and H5N9 were in British Columbia. In Manitoba, an alarmingly 24% were H5 positive. In the testing in southern Michigan, 2 of the 20 tested birds were H5N1 positive, so the percentage in certain regions of the United States may also be alarmingly high.

The high frequency6 of H5 in wild birds is a concern because H5 can become highly pathogenic, and can acquire mammalian polymorphism. Moreover, it can most easily recombine with H5N1 from Asia because of regions of genetic identity.

There is already evidence for both processes. Although a large number of H5 virus was identified last year, only one sequence has been made public. However, that sequence has polymorphisms shared by swine in Canada as well as H5N1 in Russia.

The tandem polymorphism from H1N1 Canadian swine were describe earlier. Today 2006 HA sequences Russia were released. A new polymorphism found in three recent isolates from Russia, A/cat/Dagestan/87/06(H5N1), A/chickem/Krasnodar/199/06(H5N1), A/chicken/Adygea/203/06(H5N1), was also present in the H5 in British Columbia.

Analysis of the H5N1 sequence from Michigan can be used to determine of the evolution in the 2006 isolate and can be used to evaluate new polymorphism present in new Qinghai isolates.

Full sequences of the Michigan swans should be made public as soon as possible.
 
=




<B><font size=+1 color=red><center>China confirms new H5N1 human case</font>

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-08-15 06:21
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2006-08/15/content_664634.htm </center>
The Chinese Ministry of Health on Monday confirmed a man had died from the H5N1 bird flu virus in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The victim, a 62-year-old farmer, became ill on June 19, and died on July 12.

Epidemiological research showed the man did not have close contact with any human cases of bird flu and sick or dead poultry in the last month of his life. </b>

The regional center for disease control (CDC) and prevention tested his samples and got negative results 14 days after he fell ill, but the re-test by the national CDC on July 16 indicated he was H5N1 positive.

On August 2, the national CDC tested the rest of his samples left from previous tests and again got positive results, said the ministry.

The ministry confirmed it as a human case of bird flu by both Chinese and WHO standards and reported the new case to the World Health Organization.

Local health authorities have tightened prevention and control measures and have found no abnormal symptoms of the people who had close contact with the farmer.

This case brings China's total human cases of bird flu to 21 and the death toll from the disease to 14.

An outbreak of bird flu in poultry in Xinjiang's Aksu City was confirmed on July 14.

A total of 3,045 chickens were killed by the disease and another 356,976 were culled when the outbreak was confirmed, according to the Ministry of Agriculture.

It announced on August 10 that the outbreak had been brought under control.

The information office of the Ministry of Health said they could not link the new human case with outbreaks among poultry in the region.

The source of infection for the new case is still unclear, spokesman of the Ministry of Health Mao Qun'an told Xinhua. The direct causes of most of the previous cases in China are also unknown.

Last week, the Ministry of Health confirmed the mainland's first human casualty of bird flu actually occurred in November 2003, two years before the previous official figures.

The case, in which a 24-year-old man died in Beijing, was first revealed by eight Chinese scientists in June who published a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine. The ministry then carried out parallel tests with the WHO to confirm their claims.

The WHO has said it was the first ever human infection from the H5N1 outbreak.

By August 9, the WHO had recorded 236 human cases of bird flu, including 138 fatalities.
 
=




<B><center>10:07, August 15, 2006
<font size=+1 color=brown>Possible bird flu strain detected in Dutch zoo: report </font>

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200608/15/eng20060815_293157.html </center>
The deadly H5N1 bird flu strain is feared to be behind the death of two owls in a Dutch zoo, Radio Netherlands reported Monday. </b>

Tests are being carried out after two young hawk owls died last week in a Rotterdam's Blijdorp zoo. Two other owls were destroyed by the zoo.

If the tests prove the existence of the H5N1 virus, it would be the first case of H5N1 in the Netherlands.

The four hawk owls were born in May, just after all the birds in the zoo were vaccinated against bird flu, said Radio Netherlands.

As a precaution, all the birds at Blijdorp are being kept indoors and the staff have taken virus inhibitors.

Source: Xinhua
 
=



<B><center>09:44, August 15, 2006
<font size=+1 color=green>Bird flu possibly found in U.S. wild birds </font>

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200608/15/eng20060815_293220.html </center>
Scientists may have discovered bird flu in wild mute swans in Michigan although it doesn't appear to be the highly pathogenic strain, the White House announced on Monday. </b>

"They believe it is a strain of low pathogenicity, similar to the strains that have been seen in North America before," said White House spokesman Tony Snow.

The wild mute swans inhabit the upper Midwest state of Michigan. Testing was under way to confirm the presence of the virus and its type, said the officials.

Scientists had feared that the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu would reach North America sometime this year. Just last week, the U.S. expanded its monitoring for wild migratory birds throughout the nation to check for early warning signs.

However, health officials stressed that the virus' appearance in wild birds would not be a public health crisis, especially if it were the low-pathogenic strain.

Source: Xinhua
 
=




<B><center>08:05, August 15, 2006
<font size=+1 color=blue>Thailand to continue strict measures to control bird flu </font>

http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200608/15/eng20060815_293064.html </center>
Strict measures to control bird flu in Thailand will remain imposed until the end of this year, Vice Minister for Agriculture Charal Trinvuthipong said on Monday.

The control measures will focus on free-range duck-raising farmers who must switch to closed system farming that has been proven to be safer.

About 60 percent of Thailand's duck farmers have registered for the closed system, he said.

Strict measures will also continue to control the spread of bird flu virus carried by migratory birds, he said.

Harsh punitive measures will remain imposed against those who clandestinely transport or sell poultry which have died of unknown cause.

"Campaigns to raise awareness and consciousness of poultry vendors will continue," Charal said.

According to Public Health Minister Pinij Jarusombat, 84 patients in 18 provinces nationwide remain under close monitoring for suspected bird flu infection. No new bird flu patient has been reported in the kingdom since the latest two cases were affirmed last month.

Source: Xinhua
 

Fuzzychick

Membership Revoked
Finally the news is starting to trickle in that it's H2H, disheartening to say the least
imagine a carrier boarding a plane...that to me after much thought would be doomsday scenario

JPD said:
H5N1 Familial Cluster in Western Java Indonessia

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08140601/H5N1_Java_Cluster.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 14, 2006

Villagers said Aup and his cousin collected the carcasses of around 100 chickens that died suddenly last week and fed them to dogs, said Sony.

Sony said Aup's cousin died after showing symptoms of the virus.

Health officials have said they suspect that many Indonesians have died from bird flu unreported because they no tests were performed.

Laboratory tests have confirmed Aup has the virus.


The above comments describe a new H5N1 bird flu family cluster in West Java. The teenager, who is the third confimed case in western Java this week, had left the hospital is being treated at home with herbal medicines, and his cousin has already died with bird flu symptoms. Disease onset dates have not been given for the cousin, but it is likely that he infected his cousin. Although there is dead poultry in the area, there still has been no match between H5N1 from human and bird cases on Java in Indonesia this year.

The lack of testing of the index case is not uncommon, which limits the number of clusters reported. However, the latest familial cluster in Indonesia is cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
Cousin of Indonesian bird flu case dies with flu-like symptoms

http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=18370

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - A cousin of Indonesia's latest bird flu
patient died showing symptoms of the virus more than a week ago, a health
official said Tuesday as he pleaded for more medical equipment.

Seventeen-year-old Umar Aup, from Cikelet in West Java's Garut district who has refused hospital treatment, is Indonesia's 57th confirmed case of H5N1.

Forty-four of those were fatalities, making the nation the world's worst-hit.

Iman Firmanulah, the head of the contagious disease section of Garut's
health office, told AFP that Aup's cousin Misbah died on August 6 exhibiting bird flu-like symptoms.

Both youths had come into contact with dead poultry.

But 20-year-old Misbah was buried before samples were taken, he said.

"We cannot positively say that he died of avian influenza but he showed
symptoms that were similar to those of bird flu patients," he said, adding that any decision to exhume the body was outside his jurisdiction.

Samples from Misbah's parents had since been taken for testing, he said.

Firmanulah also urged Indonesia's health ministry to provide his office and Garut hospital with suitable equipment to treat patients.

"Health minister (Siti Fadilah Supari) has appointed Garut hospital as a
designated center for bird flu treatment, but don't just give us difficult tasks -- please also give us proper equipment!" he said.

He said Garut hospital lacked ventilation and defibrillation equipment and also needed vehicles so they could carry out surveillance in isolated areas. It takes four hours by motorcycle to reach Cikelet, where the current patient is, he said.

Indonesia reported its first bird flu deaths in July last year and has seen a steady rise in its toll.

The world's first lab-confirmed human-to-human transmission of bird flu
occurred in Indonesia three months ago in a cluster of seven deaths, sparking serious concern among scientists. (*)
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesian girl dies of suspected bird flu

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/healthfluindonesia

JAKARTA (AFP) - A suspected bird flu victim who is from the same area as Indonesia's latest confirmed case died in hospital, a health official said.

The nine-year-old girl, Ai Siti Aminah, was from Cikelet in West Java's Garut district, said Wijayanti, a doctor from Garut's main hospital. It is the same area as a 17-year-old confirmed two days ago as infected with H5N1.

Wijayanti told AFP that the girl, who was from a different village to the teenager, was admitted to hospital on Monday afternoon with pneumonia.

"She was immediately taken to the isolation unit, had samples taken and then received treatment but her condition was already failing at the time. She remained unconscious until her death today," she said.

Senior health ministry official Nyoman Kandun told AFP that laboratories in Jakarta had not released results of her tests yet.

Positive tests must be returned at two separate laboratories in Jakarta before being listed by the World Health Organisation as a confirmed case.

Seventeen-year-old Umar Aup was listed as Indonesia's 57th confirmed case of H5N1 on Sunday. Forty-four of those died, making the nation the world's worst-hit.

Another health official said Tuesday that a cousin of Aup had died showing symptoms of the virus more than a week ago.

Iman Firmanulah, the head of the contagious disease section of Garut's health office, told AFP that Aup's cousin Misbah died on August 6 exhibiting bird flu-like symptoms.

But 20-year-old Misbah was buried before samples were taken, he said.

"We cannot positively say that he died of avian influenza but he showed symptoms that were similar to those of bird flu patients," he said.

The health ministry's Kandun said he was being a considered a "probable positive" case.

Firmanulah also urged Indonesia's health ministry to provide his office and Garut hospital with suitable equipment to treat patients.

"Health minister (Siti Fadilah Supari) has appointed Garut hospital as a designated center for bird flu treatment, but don't just give us difficult tasks -- please also give us proper equipment," he said.

He said Garut hospital lacked ventilation and defibrillation equipment and also needed vehicles for surveillance in isolated areas. It takes four hours by motorcycle to reach Cikelet, he said.

Indonesia reported its first bird flu deaths in July last year and has seen a steady rise in its toll.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Bird Flu Cluster in Garut Indonesia Grows to Three?

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08150601/H5N1_Garut_3.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 15, 2006

The nine-year-old girl, Ai Siti Aminah, was from Cikelet in West Java's Garut district, said Wijayanti, a doctor from Garut's main hospital. It is the same area as a 17-year-old confirmed two days ago as infected with H5N1.

Wijayanti told AFP that the girl, who was from a different village to the teenager, was admitted to hospital on Monday afternoon with pneumonia.

"She was immediately taken to the isolation unit, had samples taken and then received treatment but her condition was already failing at the time. She remained unconscious until her death today," she said.

Seventeen-year-old Umar Aup was listed as Indonesia's 57th confirmed case of H5N1 on Sunday. Forty-four of those died, making the nation the world's worst-hit.

Another health official said Tuesday that a cousin of Aup had died showing symptoms of the virus more than a week ago.

Iman Firmanulah, the head of the contagious disease section of Garut's health office, told AFP that Aup's cousin Misbah died on August 6 exhibiting bird flu-like symptoms.

But 20-year-old Misbah was buried before samples were taken, he said.
"We cannot positively say that he died of avian influenza but he showed symptoms that were similar to those of bird flu patients," he said.

The above comments describe three suspect H5N1 bird flu cases in Garut in West Java. Although H5N1 has only been confirmed in the only surviving member, the index case was the cousin of the H5N1 confirmed case and test results from the third member has not been released. However, these three cases appear to be forming a geographical cluster in West Java. These cases are in addition to the two confirmed fatalities in suburbs of Jakarta who also died with the past week.

Five new cases on Jakarta are cause for concern. Although WHO updates cite contact with dead or dying poultry, the sequences released from the patients on Java do not match the poultry H5N1 sequences. Recent bird samples are being tested in Australia, but the first set of samples released are from birds from Wates in northern Sumatra and are closer to the Karo cluster, although there are also significant differences in that group also. However, those differences may be related to collection dates. Currently, there are no public bird H5N1 sequences from 2006.

However, the Java cases have been reported for over a year, and all but one of the human sequences reported to date have the novel cleavage site, RESRRRKKR. These isolates also have changes in all eight gene segments that do not match the poultry isolates. Thus far the only match with the human sequences is with H5N1 from a cat in the Jakarta area..

The new cluster described above highlights the large number of cases in Indonesia, as well as the lack of testing in regions where there are poultry deaths. Although poultry may not be the source of the human infections, they may signal H5N1 in an alternative reservoir. Many or most of the cases without a link to dead or dying poultry would be missed, because H5N1 is tightly linked to this association. Clusters such as the one in Garut however, raise the suspicion level which leads to more testing.

However, the lack of testing in humans as well as alternative reservoirs of H5N1 infections, such as swine, cats, dogs, and wild birds is cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Genetic Diversity Producing False Negatives?

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/08150602/H5N1_False_Again.html

Recombinomics Commentary
August 15, 2006

The case occurred in a 62-year-old male farmer from the north-western province of Xinjiang. He developed symptoms on 19 June and died on 12 July. Initial tests on patient specimens produced negative results. As a precautionary measure, tests were repeated during July and August and eventually produced positive results, which were confirmed today by the Ministry of Health.

The above comments from the most recent WHO update again highlight concerns over false negatives. Media reports indicated that the patient was positive at the national center, even though the same sample had tested negative at the regional center. These data suggest H5N1 may be evolving away from some of the testing procedure used in testing birds or people.

The above case is the first reported in northwestern China. Prior human cases have been reported in eastern or southeastern China. Xingjian, in western China has reported positives for H5N1 in birds, including an outbreak in June, but the above patient has no link to birds and China has a least two distinct major strains of H5N1 co-circulating. The Fujian stain has been reported for all human cases in 2005 and 2006. However, the Qinghai strain was first identified in central China last year and has been detected in many outbreaks, including central and western China this year.

The Fujian strain has spread to Laos, Malaysia and Hong Kong and isolates from this year have Qinghai polymorphism. Similarly, Qinghai isolates have Fujian polymorphism. These two major stains have been recombining to produce new versions of H5N1.

Similarly, Fujian H5N1, which is Clade 2, has been found in southeast Asia, which previously had been endemic for Clade 1. Clade 1 polymorphisms from Vietnam and Thailand have been found in the newly released Indonesian sequences, which are distinct from the Fujian and Qinghai sequences in China, but are also Clade 2. At least one Indonesian bird sequence has also acquired the Qinghai HA cleavage site.

Similarly, the recent Qinghai isolates from Russia have at least one polymorphism from the wild bird H5N2 in Canada. It is likely that this change is also in the recent H5N1 isolates in Michigan.

Thus, H5N1 has been actively recombining and evolving. This evolution may produce false negatives. The H5 PCR positive result on Prince Edward Island was said to have been a weak positive. Similarly, most of the human samples in Thailand are said to be H5N1 negative, although there are reports of 300 fatalities in 6000 seasonal flu patients in Thailand. The 5% case fatality rate is extremely high, even if the 6000 flu patients were limited to those hospitalized.

H5N1 is dramatically increasing its geographical reach and genetic diversity. There are already at least four versions that have caused human fatalities and are currently circulating (Clade 1 in Southeast Asia, Fujian in China and southeast Asia, Indonesian in Indonesia, and Qinghai worldwide).

This H5N1 genetic diversity is without precedent and leads to rapid evolution. It is unclear that the H5N1 testing has kept pace with these changes.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
14 Aug 2006 21:44 GMT =
WSJ:Bird Flu In Mich Swans May Disrupt US Poultry
Exports


By Scott Kilman
Of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

CHICAGO (Dow Jones)--U.S. government officials are waiting to see whether the discovery of bird flu in a pair of Michigan swans will disrupt exports by the U.S. poultry industry.

While genetic screening by U.S. government scientists has determined that the virus found in the wild birds isn't the deadly Asian form of the H5N1 virus, countries such as Russia and Japan have clamped down before on imports of U.S. chickens when other forms of bird flu were detected in the U.S. These countries want to protect their domestic flocks from the highly-contagious respiratory disease.

(This story and related background material will be available on The Wall Street Journal's Web site, WSJ.com)

The U.S. government has notified Japan, Russia, Mexico and Canada about the Michigan discovery.

A spokesman for Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN), the nation's biggest poultry concern, said the company hadn't heard of any concerns from its international customers. USA Poultry & Egg Export Council, an industry group that handles trade issues, said it hadn't detected any negative international reaction so far.

The U.S. poultry industry is just beginning to recover from problems in foreign markets where consumer confidence was undermined by the discovery of the Asian H5N1 influenza strain in birds. A drop in foreign demand earlier this year caused prices for U.S. chicken to drop sharply, helping to generate losses for companies such as Tyson Foods and Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (PPC) during their recently concluded fiscal third quarters.

The U.S. poultry industry exports about 15% of its chicken meat annually, which usually generates about $2 billion in sales.

U.S. government scientists are conducting weeks of testing to conclusively identify the virus they found in the Michigan swans. While the virus resembles a mild form of H5N1 influenza long known to be present in North American wild birds, U.S. scientists can't yet rule out any danger to domesticated chickens.
-By Scott Kilman, The Wall Street Journal

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

August 14, 2006 17:44 ET (21:44 GMT)

http://framehosting.dowjonesnews.com/sample/samplestory.asp?StoryID=2006081421440000&Take=1

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia

More bird flu possible in Garut

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20060816.H09&irec=8

JAKARTA: A nine-year-old girl in Garut regency, West Java, is suspected of having bird flu since she is showing typical symptoms of the deadly virus, a Health Ministry official said Tuesday.

"The girl's specimen is now being tested at our lab, but we don't have results yet," Runizar Rusin of the ministry's bird flu command post told The Jakarta Post.

He said laboratory test results usually came out a day after a specimen was tested.

"We expect the results by Wednesday," he said.

Runizar could not say whether the girl had any contact with sick poultry, but added that her bird flu-like symptoms included cough, fever and pneumonia.

West Java is the province hardest hit by bird flu, with 14 of Indonesia's 45 bird flu fatalities recorded there.
 

PCViking

Lutefisk Survivor
Jackie Chan in bird flu public service announcement
Actor has serious message for children

16 August 2006, Bangkok, Thailand - World-famous actor and martial arts expert Jackie Chan stars in a new television public service announcement to alert children and their families around the world to the dangers of highly pathogenic avian influenza, or bird flu.

The PSA was produced by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Health Organization (WHO), with funding from the government of Japan.

The one-minute spot shows Chan, a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, with six children and some very colourful origami birds that are used to convey an essential message. Chan tells the girls and boys in a firm tone: birds can pass on avian influenza to people, so it’s important to stay away from sick and dead birds, especially chickens. He then nods approvingly as 8-year-old Ava pipes out: “But playing with paper birds is fine.”

Message seeks to alert not to panic children

While the PSA deals with a disease that has spread beyond Asia and often incites fear, it aims to do so with panache rather than panic.

“It was great to work with this group of children on something that concerns Asia and the entire world. This is not about creating alarm but helping children be more alert and careful. When it comes to bird flu, we don’t want to take any chances with our kids,” said Jackie Chan.

International school children star with Jackie Chan

The children in the PSA, ranging in age from 6 to 9, were filmed at Sha Tin Junior School in Hong Kong. They all come from different parts of the globe, making this a truly international cast.

All six children were given a crash course in the art of origami making and some even passed on a few pertinent tips to Chan before the cameras rolled. As the PSA shows, both children and Chan were quick learners.

The PSA aims to harness the influence and popularity of Jackie Chan to reach the maximum number of households and will be broadcast as widely as possible. As the world’s biggest mass medium, television has a crucial role to play in communicating accurate and timely information about avian influenza, a disease that does not heed geographical borders or cultural boundaries.

Disease has now reached far beyond Southeast Asia

A highly pathogenic form of avian influenza has been on the rise since mid-2003. The H5N1 virus was first detected in birds in South-East Asia and this year was reported in Europe, the Middle East, South Asia and Africa. Two hundred million birds have been killed directly by the virus or culled as the first line of defence to contain outbreaks and reduce the possibility of transmission to humans.

To date, there have been more than 230 human cases of influenza caused by the H5N1 virus, over half of which were fatal. The great majority of deaths have been in Asia. All evidence to date indicates that close contact with sick or dead birds is the principal source of human infection with the H5N1 virus.

UN team work combats bird flu

FAO is leading global efforts to eradicate avian influenza in birds, providing countries with policy advice, technical information, and support with surveillance, diagnosis and disease management. WHO is coordinating the worldwide response to human cases of the virus including assisting countries with their influenza pandemic preparedness efforts, rapidly investigating new human cases and monitoring the evolution of the virus. UNICEF is working closely with UN organizations, governments and other partners to arm families with the knowledge and skills they need to protect themselves from avian influenza and reduce the risk of a human influenza pandemic.

Note to editors: The PSA is now available through the newsmarket (http://www.thenewsmarket.com).

http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000376/index.html

:vik:
 

JPD

Inactive
Discovery of new strain of H5N1 prompts rethink of fowl controls

http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/17Aug2006_news02.php

PIYAPORN WONGRUANG

The discovery of a new type of bird flu virus in Thailand has prompted officials to ponder prevention and control measures to prevent further spread of the disease.

A new type of the H5N1 strain has been confirmed in Nakhon Phanom, where over 300,000 chickens have died or been culled as a result of widespread infections, according to Yong Poovorawan, team leader of virologists monitoring changes in the virus since 2004.

The strain has a genetic character close to that of the virus in southern China, he said, adding that virologists were still unsure how it crossed the border from there into Thailand.

There are four types of the H5N1 virus in the region _ the so-called Thai-Vietnamese type, the Indonesian type, and another two types occurring in China. The Thai-Vietnamese type has plagued Thailand since official confirmation of the first outbreak in early 2004.

The virologist said the impact of the new strain on human health was so far no different from that of the Thai-Vietnamese type. But he warned officials to pay attention if they wanted to develop human vaccines which can tackle both types of the virus strain.

''We now have two types of bird flu strain in the country. The new one may not yet have any significance in terms of its health impact but it certainly has significance for our control measures, which might have to improve to cope with its emergence,'' he said.

Livestock Development Department chief Yukol Limlamthong said the agency would beef up controls on fowl movements between area zones, and he called on poultry raisers to tighten their bio-security measures.

Director of the Epidemiology Bureau Kumnuan Ungchusak said scientists needed to be aware of every bird flu type emerging here, so human vaccines could be developed.

But health officials would not strengthen bird flu control measures among humans as the present regime was already intensive, Dr Kumnuan said. Sick people found to be in close contact with ailing fowls would be listed as suspect cases, he said.

Meanwhile, the National Institute of Animal Health has confirmed the success of a vaccine prototype for fowls. Director Pornchai Chamnanpood said complete vaccine production which could pave the way for commercial use would be accomplished by February next year.

Thailand is now in the fourth outbreak round, which has killed two people, one each in Phichit and Uthai Thani. Since the first round, more than 60 million fowls have been culled and 16 people have died.
 
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